Supporting neurodiversity in work and education
Neurodivergent individuals could also use more help and encouragement in full-time education.
IMD’s Anna Dunand, as a mother of a son who is dyslexic and has attention deficit disorder (ADD), has experience of this at both professional and personal levels.
In many regards, Dunand’s son’s is a typical Swiss 15-year-old who enjoys skiing, mountain biking and computer games. But the challenges he has faced in education reflect those that many neurodivergent adults face at work, particularly around planning and time management. “When he looked at his agenda for the week, he used to panic as there was too much going on,” Dunand explains. “We realized that focusing on smaller chunks, like Monday and Tuesday first, reduced his anxiety, allowing him to focus and progress.”
Dunand’s son’s ADD means that noisy environments also present challenges. “He can be in the classroom and pick up every conversation that’s happening at once, which is overwhelming. His mind wanders, so he needs lots of peace and quiet,” she explains.
While she sees businesses making highly effective efforts to encourage neurodiversity, school policies that undermine official claims to support neurodivergent students – for example, effectively denying her son access to use of a laptop to mitigate the effects of his dyslexia – have frustrated Dunand. “Teachers need to help neurodivergent children reach their full potential – which means using all the tools available,” she emphasizes.
Dunand recalls that, when her son was eight, teachers assessed him as being at a low attainment level due to his dyslexia, even though his IQ was very high, potentially jeopardizing his chance of progressing to higher education later. The family challenged that assessment. “We said, ‘You’re putting him in a box,’” recalls Dunand. Now, as these efforts have relieved him of this stigma, her son is thriving in his studies, with a good chance of going to university in a few years’ time to study physics and mathematics, his favorite subjects.
Neurodivergent young people need not and should not face a bleak future, Dunand insists. She points out that neurodivergent people who have achieved highly in education are typically resilient and determined, having had to battle through adversity – something employers should recognize. Further, there is growing interest in the potential benefits of “dyslexic thinking.” LinkedIn has added the term as a positive attribute option for profiles, while Made by Dyslexia, a global charity, in partnership with Virgin and the Open University, has launched a University of Dyslexic Thinking . It aims to reframe dyslexic thinking, in the words of Virgin’s co-founder Sir Richard Branson as “not a weakness but a superpower.”
“Dyslexic thinking is interesting from a workforce perspective because dyslexic people are often very good at thinking in three dimensions,” explains Dunand. “They are highly creative and innovative, have excellent personal skills, and can see the big picture and make connections. These are precisely the skills needed in a world reshaped by AI.”